West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 11 Aug 1898, p. 3

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tain and three rt, ngâ€" to be | her bore and poke pen: the world SOME OF WEALT And the Profts They Fay Thetr Fortunate Ownersâ€"Sinzle Wines That Â¥ieid Hany and trembl Babamians fected thei lighted the When th which, in tropical climates, pervades alk nature at such a time, was undisâ€" turbed by the slightest murmur of any kind. Two young ladiea sat down to & burp and a piano, and a gent‘eman acâ€" L o en C raed glish ose counted whose aggregate value is} TH FRQ4 THE BARTH Mscoveries CHEST MINES IN nd € the Fabul leonda Ds O Mammaâ€"You dear. eweet little cherâ€" ubl Do you want to give away all of that money your uncle gave you? There was over a dollar. \ I spent some of it, mamma. Did you? How much is there left i There‘s a twentyâ€"live cent piece left, but th‘ candy man said it was bad. 000.000 735,000 PAY SUCH LARGE PROFITS. The Mexican silver mines of Guanaâ€" juato, Zacatecas, and Pachuca and the South American mines of Potosi, Cerro de Pusco and others have produced bilâ€" lions of dollars‘ worth of silver since passing into the hands of the white miners, 300 or more years ago, but their total production and net pro4** it would be impossible to estimate, even if all existing records were ransacked. The same rule applies to the quicksilâ€" ver mines of Almaden and Idria, in Spain, and Austria, which were first opened in the mists of antiquity, and ara still large and profitable producâ€" ers. The California quicksilver mines at New Almaden are declining in output but have earned millions for their owners within the past 40 years. Among American mines, besides those already noted, the Ontario, a . silver mine in Utah, has paid dividends of 13.430,000 in Granite Mountain, also & silver producer, has divided profits of $12,120,000. The Quiney copper mine bas paid $9,770,000, and has declared divic dends of $1,000,000 in a single year, the Homestake, a South Dakota gold proâ€" perty, has returned $6,806,250 to its owners, and bids fair to pay many times that amount in the future, a9 it is probably the largest gold mire in the world, although excelled in the av» erage richness of its rock by nearly , ALL THE OTHER GREAT MINES. The Standard and Consolidated, a Crlilornia gold mine, is credited with profits of $5,654,940; the Horn Silver has paid $5,190,000, and the Tamarack Copper Mine has divided $5,330,000 be Sicthian sulphur mines are the zest in the world and are highly fitable, but accurate figures of valâ€" and profits are unobtainable. equal to these four copper mines or which h ttle Boyâ€" Mamma, may I give t‘s in my savingsâ€"bank to that begâ€" h+ Standard and lornia goid mine, its of $5,654,940; paid $5,190,000, a per Mine has i sharebolders in s â€" ‘The list of â€" A LITELE CHERUB ts in a little over 10 t of American mines | $1,000,000 or more in that its reading would is to all except those ed in mines and minâ€" s of Australia have aderfully prolific, but . In point of diviâ€" headed by the Broken Company, which is ving paid £6,992,000, ts of subsidiary comâ€" uld be included £8,â€" t to $43.680.000. has paid $9,â€" ng money for African mines vith dividends p to an early vidends, data increase this ce â€" $10,000,000 §3 1d mine of bhe rate of e, and the he Witwaâ€" paratively on the slightly I M n the n Ausâ€" which 3 ®re s its amp up6, 006 he ch be hy ume eat aTe ol he st Jabbing of all kinds promptly attonded to. ALLAN MoF#ARLANE, Proprieton Handâ€"made Waggons In the Town of Durham, County oi Grey, including vaheable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more Jots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. G. R., Township of Bentinck, 100 acres adjomâ€" ing Town piot Durham. FOR SALE The EDGE PROPRRTY. In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. â€" Also ALLAN MeFARLANE Horse Shocing Shop, THE G@EYT REVIEW OFYTICE, GARAFRAIA goiusme susror No STRME COOT NOTAIY PUELIC, Commissioner,etc., "*â€"‘County of Grey. Sales atteuded to prosap and st rocsonable rates. Y oi l BUSINESS DIRECTORY. W. F. Cowan, Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" veyancer, Commissioner &c. Loaps arranged without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurauce effected. MEONEYX O 1.0AN stiowost rates of Interont Â¥~"I7» ome door north of . Beot‘s Store Durhani TERMS; $: por year, IN ADVANCE THAS. RAMAAGE Editor & Proprieton #* Pard up RESERVE FUND AGENTS in all prineipal points im Ontario, Q@uebes, Manitoba United Stater and England. DURHAM AGENCY. & genoral Bankib® business transsoted Drafts wrzed and collections made on all points. Depos: ts received and "interost allowad at surrent StaadardBank of Canada OAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,00¢ L. E:;::};r:ftéii;&rar. John A. Muaro Deputyâ€"Registrar. Office hours from 1( a. m. to 4 p. m. JAMES LOCKIE, rterest allowed on savings bank depos.t« of $1.0¢ tyd apwurds. Promptattention snd everyfaetlâ€" axeforded cortomers liying at u distance., I8 PUBLISNED EVERT Thursday Morning. Has opened out a firstâ€"class ullortgag; taken for yaurt purchase â€" tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Residenceâ€"King St., Hanover. W. L. McKENZIE, SSUER of Marriage Licenses. Aucâ€" MONEY TO LOAN Fire Insurance secured OFFICE, over Grant‘s Stom» Lower TowN, J. P. TELFORD, ICENSED AUCTIONRER, for th Head Office. Torontoâ€" HUCH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. WOODWORK G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thomw SaAVINGS BANK Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont, in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of for sale cheap. President. innenmin nporerns areetorro nicoueren en eetou on DPURHAM LEGAL J KELLY, Agent. lenee Durbam Onl * ails.â€" | $2,000,008 emperance Cocktails.â€"The _ clam 000 cocktail is prepared very much as the 1,0 'ogg oyster relish of the same name. The 600,0 ‘title of either is a misnomer, 80 far as |the use of spirituous liquors is conâ€" « | Geo. P)'{ Reid, | cerned. Either may be made without 8D8§®) isuch, Half a dozen of the smallest nefpal points in !cl:uns are selected, and are served in 0 | 3 | a tall glass. Over them is poured a sort oba United §t8894 | or couce made of a tabiespOObDfUl! Of ‘the liquor, a pinch of cayenne, a teaâ€" l spoonful each of vinegar, tobasco snuce IENCY' | and tomato catsup. Stir the cocktail beâ€" . iffil"‘"“d g:-m fore serving and send it to the table owed :tt.'nr:::fl |iceâ€"sold. Ths cocktail is eaten with an ‘oy:fltcr-tork. a few sips of the liquor 2 A NK | being taken afterward. Rainwater.â€"A city housekeeper conâ€" trives to bave rainwater to wash her blankets before putting them away for the summer. She does this by tapping the eavesâ€"pipe, using a large clean barâ€" rel to hold the water. It should not be put under during & shower, but afâ€" ter a steady rain has washed the soot and dirt from the roof, and the water is flowing clean. Nothing is beiter than this kind of water for the biankets. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. The Wasp Pest.â€"This is the momâ€" ent when in country homes a . little preventive uction will be productive of much comfort in relation to the wasp pest. These belligerent little insects have by this time appeared and locatâ€" ed themselves in their nooks in the crevices of piazzaâ€"railings and stone house foundations. In one of the tracts issued from the Entomological Departâ€" ment‘at Washington, it is advised to watch when the bhole is full at night of th« wandering insects and then pour a generous dose of chloroform into it. This will exterminate the colony at one blow. Coffee Tablets.â€"Coffee tablets are one of the latest additions to condensâ€" ed foods. One of these dropped into a cup of bot water produces quickly the break{ast coffee, and should be useful for the picnic basket as well as for the light housekecper. It is sometimes necessary to make a cup of coffee for a single person. Take a tablespoonful of coffes and stir with perhaps the quarter of the white of an egg. Add balf a cupful of cold water, boil, and then add a full cupful of boiling waâ€" ter. After this is put in, boil two minutes. Few cocks are able to accomâ€" plish the economical and palatable serâ€" vice of a single cup of coffee. Orange Charlotte.â€"Orange charlotte is a delicate dish, and is made from orange jelly, slightly thickened. Use a pint of the jelly, and after it is cold enough to be slightly thick, beat in a« pint of whipped cream with the whites of two eggs. Line a mold with ladyâ€"fingers, interspersed with a few slices of orange, and pour in the mixâ€" ture. Serve cold, with a custard made from the yelks of the eggs and a pint of milk. Cingur Ice Cream.â€"To a pint of milk and balf a cupful of sugar beated in a double boiler, add a quarter of a cupâ€" ful of cold milk, into which has been stirred a tablespoonful of flour. Cook all, stirring constantly for ten minâ€" utes. To the yelks of three eggs, slightly beaten, add balf a cupful of sugar and aâ€"quarter of a teaspoonful of salt; dilute this with a little of the hot mixture before pouring all togethâ€" er, and stir until it looks cooked. Strain into the freezer, aod add three cupfuls of thin cream. sealded. When cool, flayâ€" or with a tablespoonful of orange or lemon extract and oneâ€"third of a cupâ€" ful of ginger syrup; then freeze. Beâ€" fore it is perfectly stiff, work in half a pound of preserved ginger root, fineâ€" ly chopped, then pounded in a mortar: and pressed through a sieve. | is cooked thick, and a flavoring of celâ€" ery salt added. Creamed Corned Beef.â€"The leftâ€"over cold cooked corned beef is cut into dice and stirred to a sauce before it is put into a buttered puddingâ€"dish, the mixture covered with half a capful of cracker crumbs or grated ‘bread crumbs, stirred into a little melted butter. The dish is thea. set in the oven and baked until the crumbs are brown. The sauce is made by creamâ€" ing two tablespoonfuls of flour and two of butter with two cupfuls of hot milk, into which a slics of onion has been put during the heating process. The onion should be taken out when the sauce Banana Sandwiches.â€"Banana sandâ€" wiches are sometimes served as a simâ€" ple luncheon dessert, or for the chii~ dren‘s table. The fruit is sliced and placed between brown slices of butâ€" tered bread. These are laid in a shalâ€" low glass or china dish, and just before serving & pint of boiled custard is pourâ€" ed over and around them. Another varâ€" iation for the children‘s dessert is a wholesome substitute for the eclairs of which they are so fond. Buy at the baker‘s the long pointed finger rolls, and after one side has been cut down with a fork, dig dut as much of the inside as possible. Have ready a little boiledâ€" custard made in the ordinary way, except with slight additional thickness gained either with a little gelattne or by stirring in a tablespoonâ€" ful of flour, wet in a little cold milk, This is the proper proportion of a pint of custard. The custard serves as a filling for the rolls. At this season it is a pleasant variation to add a little of the strawherry jujce, pressed from fresh strawberries, or a very little pineapple or banans pulp may also be used to flavor the filling. Plain whipâ€" ped cream or that over which a little sweet chocolate has been grated is anâ€" other welcome variety. It is the pasâ€" try of the eclair which is especially unâ€" wholesome for youthful stomachs. ioi ‘ The comparative durability of iron and aluminum horseshoes was recently i tested in the cavalry of Finland. Severâ€" ial horses were each shod with one alâ€" | uininum shoe and the other three made l of iron. In some cases the alvminum ! shoe was on a fore foot, in others on & hind foot. The shoes were worn for | six weeks, and in every case the alumâ€" i inum shoe was in better condition than | the others. Ilapetniied Nes _ _A young man in St. Louis thought he ‘had fallen into extreme good luck | when be married a pretty milliner who | was earning $25 a week. His salary is | only $12, and be mentally combined the two incomes saying, "On $37 a week | we can live in clover." ‘The honeymoon | was barely over when she resigned her \ situation; and this act so disgusted him that he became rude, and she has | left him. Two enterprising and industrious sisters, Emily and Amelia Westerfield, aged respectively nineteen and sevenâ€" teen, do most of the work on their father‘s farm, in Pine Ridge, Santa Clara County, Cal. _ For three years they have been thus employed, and volâ€" untarily left school that they might assist their father, who could not afâ€" ford to employ belp. Their farm is a model in various respects, and is quite profitable. It is easy to manage thoir washing at home with a little care. Some bouseâ€" keepers put them in, a pair a week, but if an odd day towards the latter end of the week is taken, it can all be done at once. The scraps of the breadbox are something that often weighs heavily on the thoughts of the economical housekeeper. In summer bread soon molds, and the scraps, if not removed at least twice a week from the box and attended to, soon contaminate the whole. Every scrap of bread, even the crumbs of the breadâ€"board, may be made useful if they are systematically saved and dried. Some of the delights of a soldier‘s life are thus summarized by a tired inâ€" fantryman who is camped at New Orâ€" leans: "My hands are full of blisters. I couldn‘t eat the stew they gave me, The bumps in my greensward mattress, and the bugs that crawl into my ears, keep me awake all night. The mosquiâ€" toes have raised welts on my face, and my heels are all sore from drilling in coarse shoes." If a supply of bread is baked semiâ€" weekly, the breadbox should be cleared out as soon as the baking is ready to be put away, and all scraps not large enough for toust or for fried bread should be broken up and set on a tin plate in the heating closet to dry. The entire slices and pieces of a loaf which are saved for toast or for other purâ€" poses should be kept by themselves and systematically used up once A week. If they are not used for toast or fried bread after standing afew days they should be broken up and dried in the heating closet with the smaller scraps. A large lake of boiling mud, two miles in circumference, exists on the plains of Grobogana, Java. In the cenâ€" tre, immense columns of steaming mud are constantly rising and falling, while on the western edge, ure two gigantic bubbles, which form like buge balâ€" loons, and explode about three times a minute. 7 _ Cheese Balls.â€"Blend one cake of Neufchatel cwheese with two tableâ€" spoonfuls of whipped cream, the same measure of chopped almonds and one tablespoonful of minced parsley or cress. Dip buttar paddies _ into iceâ€" water and mold the cheese into balls the size of an ordinary hickory nut. Serve with the pie. It is a very common sight, in the streets of Paris, to see baby carriages which are propelled by electricirt,y. M e n Ne Un Mn enc onl nsl al These scraps to be properly dried for crumbs must stand in this place uatil all moisture bas left them. They are then in a condition to be prepared for breading, for uses in puddings and for various other purposes of cooking. There is mno purpose of cookery for which dried bread is not better than soft stale bread, except, possibly, for stuffing for fowls. l L Spiced Grapes.â€"Take six pounds of grapes, pulp them and cook the pulps until you can remove the seeds by passing through a sieve: put them with the skins and cook an nour. Then add three pounds of whole sugar, a teaâ€" spoonful each of ground cinnamon, cloves and allspice, and a hall pint of vinegar. Cook balf an hour longer and seal while hot. : eindhsesncn se nedng 0 on P w There are a great many cooks who do not know the value of ‘‘raspings," or coarse bread crumbs fried a golden brown in butter. The intelligent cook uses a few of these fried crumbs to decorate a fried fish or to scalter through a dish of boiled noodle or of macaroni. When necessary to cover an imperfectly browned fish, or any fried disb, a few raspings fried a golden prown may be scattered over, and will repair all the sins of poor frying. _ Lemon Ccokies.â€"Four cups of flour, one cup of butler, two cups of sugar, juice and grated peel of one lemon, three eggs beaten very light. When well mixed add half a teaspoonful of soda dissolved in a tablespoonful of milk. Rol! out like cookies, bake a light brown. ‘be dough should be quite stiff. Use no other wetting. ml? cA e Wnn Smd it cmd |einisl bver umt oi) For use in puddings and in any, dish of which they are to form a componâ€" ent part, breadcrumbs, dried and siftâ€" ed, should be used, and should be moistâ€" ened for use with a pint of scalded milk to a cup of dried crumbs. After they have cooled, the mixture should have additional milk, if necessary ; eERZS and the other ingredients should be added. Do not attempt to soften dried crumbs with cold milk; it takes too long. Soy.â€"Crush two quarts each of stemâ€" med currants and raspberries, add three cuns of vinegar, two cups of suâ€" gar, a teaspoonful each of ground mace allspice, cloves and pepper; boil one hour, then bottie and seal. DOMESTIC RECIPES BREAD CRUMBS. who Be sure to pronounce correctly and enunciate distinctly, in a chest voice, avoiding shrill notes and nasal tones. â€" Young people should be prompt. Tardiness is truant to the best interâ€" ests of life. Be careful of your speech_as of your actions. ? Young Folks. ] Bad associates and good manners nevâ€" er affiliate _ A kindness should always be rememâ€" bered, and a confidence sacredly kept. Punctuality in keeping appointments is a cardinal virtue. _ f A WHISTLING LANGUAGE. _ The probabilities are that very few people bave heard of this curious lanâ€" guage, which is in use by the shepâ€" herds of Teneriffe. It dates from & prehistoric period, although the first notice of it is mede by a French travâ€" eler in 1455, By placing two or three fingers in the mouth, it is possible to make the whistle carry to a distance of about three imiles, and in these loneâ€" ly hills even to a much greater disâ€" tance. The shepherds are enabled in this manner to carry on a conversation: with their distant friends, and so pre-‘ vent any feeling ot loneliness. ‘ It may sound curious and paradoxiâ€" cal, but the whistling is in Spnnish.‘ that is to say, the words represented by the whistling are of the Spanish language. Long practice and heredity have produced extraordinary skill in the art, for their vocabulary is alengâ€" thy one and embraces a code of signals which convey telegraphically what it is hard to express in the ordinary manâ€" ner. The children, as well as the adults are adepts, and it is no unusual thing to find two sturdy urchins conversing across wide ravines and lofty peaks without seeing each other the whole time. ] Hen hawks had bothered poor mamâ€" :mn. a great deal that season. First one little yellow brood and then another llittle brown brood had been sadly brokâ€" |en up, until only a few lonesome little \fellows were putting on their feather ‘coats out in the barnyard. This little ‘brood was the last one hatched. and |the very, very choicest one. Mamma |said every baby in it was worth quite & lot of money. y ) Pexol ut p*â€"0â€"*â€"0â€"0â€"â€"%â€"0â€"0â€"09â€"40â€" 90â€"# hadn‘t 1" "One, two three,â€"why, no, they‘re all here. Here‘s ten." Then mamma counted all over again. There were ten tiny yellow things left! "Oh, oh, it was Fluffy Duffâ€"it was Fluffy Duff" Tillie cried in bhorror. And it was 22 minutes by mamma‘s clock before she could see any joke in it at all. Then Tillie laugbed. "It was a reg‘lar joke on that hen hawk, mamma!" she said. "It served him ‘xactly right, didn‘t it ? An‘ I guess when he‘s eaten through Fluffy Duffy‘s bones, he‘ll wish he "There," mamma said fervently. "I do hope these little fluf{ balls will have a chance to grow up before a miserable ben bawk spies them out!" She set one little yellow chick after another down on the soft clover patch and brought out old Mother Biddy to take care of them. But the very best and carefulest Mother Biddy in the world can‘t always save her baby from that great, terrible, swooping thing that pounces down on it all in a flash! There‘s one gone so soon!" groanâ€" ed poor mamma, running. out with Tilâ€" lie at her heels. An hour or two afterward mamma heard a squawking and clucking and hurried to the door just in time to "shoo" & great bhawk away from the clover patch. But before he went, though be was frightened nearly out of his wits, mamma "shooâ€"ed" so loud, he snatched up a tiny yellow.thing and sailed away with it in his claws. Tillie set one down now. He was as bigâ€"or as littleâ€"and every bit as yelâ€" low and fluffy as mamma‘s chickens and he looked like an own cousin withâ€" out any ‘"removes!" His first name was Fluiffy and bis last name, the fuinâ€" ily name was Duff. __ l ‘There, Fluify Duff, you stay right straight here an‘ catch a angle worm for dinner," coramanded Tillie‘s sweet little voice, ‘"an‘ get ‘quainted with mamma‘s chickies." . "There, scamper away, little chickâ€"aâ€" bids, and mind you keep your little weatherâ€"eyes out for swooping, pouncâ€" ing things up in the air!" said she, and the minute you see one, runâ€"runâ€" run for Mother Biddy‘s feather bed !" Then mamma went in and Tillie came out. Sbe was raising chickens too, only hers didn‘t grow a bit or shed their cunning little yellow dresses for feather coats. Tillie‘s chickens were made with wire backbones and legs, and when you set themm down on the clover patch, how they didn‘t scurry away ! Come here you nigoramus! I‘m ‘shamed to have to ‘fess You don‘t know any letter ‘Cept just your cookie S. Now listen and I‘ll tell youâ€" This round hole‘s name is O, And when you put a tail in It makes it Q, you know. And if it has a front door To walk in at, it‘s C, Then make a seat right here To sit on, and it‘s G. And this tall letter, dolly, Is I, and it stands for me; And when it puts a bat on, It makes a cup 0‘ T. And curly I is J, dear, And balf of B is P, And E without his slippers on Is only F, you see! You turn A upside downwards, And people call it V; And if it‘s twins like this one, W ‘twill be. Now, doilly, when you learn ‘em, You‘ll know a great big. heapâ€" Most much‘s Iâ€"O, dolly1 _ I b‘lieve â€" fou’vé gone asleep! THE JOKE ON MR. HAWK DOLLY‘S LESSON. REMEMBER s hifi tily m3 D4 un cce ol We cal! the specia‘ attention cf Pos maste‘s and subscribers to the following sy nopsis ef the newcpraperiaws : 1. If any person orders hispeper discon tinued, he must pay all arreages, or the publisher may coptinpe to send it until payâ€" mentie made, and collectthe whole ar cunl whether it be taken from the office or not. ‘There can be no loga) discontinuxnce until paymentismade. 2. Aay person who takes a paper ftrow tho post office, whether directed to hit pame or another, or whether be has sub scribed or not is responsible for the pay. 8. If asubscriber orders his papor to be stopped at a certaintime, and the publishec continues to send, the subscriberis boun< %> pay for it if he takes it out of the po* office. This proceeds upon ke groun< hat a man must pay for whet he uses. Sash and Door Factory. â€"<lBD () gopaaame Aaving Completed our New Factory we are now prepared to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. . We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orders can be filled. Lumber, Shingles man recognizoc this principle long ago. EveryOne knows that let disease or injury affeot this part of the human eystem and death is almost certain. | Injure the spinal cord. which is the medium o° these nerve cenâ€" tres, and paralysin ia sure to follow Here it the Arst prinolple. ‘The trouâ€" The great dizocverer of this medicine was possessed of the knowledge thet the seat of all dlnage is the nerve centros, situated at the beso of the brain. In this belief he had the best scientists and meCical men of the world The eyes of the world sre literally Lxed on South American Nervine. They are not viewing it as & nincâ€"days‘ wonâ€" Ger, but critical and experienced mon have been studying this medicine for years, with the one resultâ€"they have found that its olmim of perfect curaâ€" tive qualities cannot be gaingaid. cccupying mises. . I: In the matter of ,ood health temporâ€" izing measures, while possibly suececsâ€" ful for the moment, can never be lastâ€" ing. ‘Those in poor health soon know whether the remedy they are using is simply a passing incideft in their exâ€" perience, bracing them up for the day, or lometh.!ns that is getting at the seat of the disease and is surely and permanently rertoring. . Pn wl A Discovery, RBased on Scientific Principles. that Renders Failure Impossible. TBE EVERT OMR LR K HLB B CS TXE ES 0F ThE WOR Aro Fixed Upon South Ameriâ€" can Nervine. Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. "ae T7 uy o1 t( YÂ¥ O HMERICAX : _â€"S Li £ it J neme + a ! â€"= d #*s MNERVINE .3A ~'-.‘,",';"’»,':f’- !{ __N ie t c333 \ f es 3 en h NN. TBA \. " $ _?7’& :{:’: ‘_:A’- C ." "‘4% ’~ : S\ §6i: wis A ( i M\ Ey \', f -"'\" 8 ; e ; . -,,',7,.1;”_17{“3 eP se B J 4 s PL im A R \(‘- e -\"\J‘\f, é’" J w ® ."“ â€". C .;}-‘" l{" $ ) y â€" t %’:'\ ?(“S f F,'_ ".‘a:‘&\\\' A.« Newspaper Laws. ; _ exactly the same prcâ€" nédeed the ordinary layâ€" For sale by Mc In Stocl. nesWX G. & J. McKECHNIE [ble with medical treatment geu« |ally, and with neerly all medicines, i# that they aim simply to treat the orzap |that may be diseased. @outh Ameridan Nervine passes by the organs, and ifme mediately applies its ourative poWeRs |to the merve centres. from which the â€"organs of the body receive their supplÂ¥. of nerve fluld. The nerve cemtro® ‘herled, and of nroesrity the orgum which has shown the outward evidenog only of derangement is healed. I:A'x gertion, . nervousnerg, impoverish blood, liver compiaint all owe their origin to a derangzement of the nerve centres. ‘Thousands bear tesiimony that they have been cured of thes# troubles, even when they have become The eyes of the werld have not been disappointed in the inquiry into the #uoâ€" cess of South Amsrican :\'irvlno- Peoâ€" ple marvel. it is trus, at !ts wonderful medieal qualities, but they knew beâ€" yond all quertion that it does everyâ€" thing that is claimed for it 1t stands «lone as the one great certain curing remedy of the rineicerth century. Why should<=nyone sufer distress and #‘ck» ness while this remedy is praofically at their hands * CC /. Cemeaiete. Farlane & Co. #o Gderpcrate as to bafie the skill of the mest eminent pmysicians, because South American Nervine has gone t& headquarters and cured there. 3 IB still to be found in his Old Stand opponite the De‘rlnu Bakery. Firstâ€"Class Hearse. UNDERTAKING Promptly attended to. and Lath always Furniture uy (u KRESS z2 P $ 0

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